Showing posts with label Catwoman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Catwoman. Show all posts

Friday, May 31, 2013

Dork Art: Batman 1972


Dork Favorite, Francesco Francavilla is currently cooking an Elseworld's that drops the Batman Mythology into the magical realm of 1972....huh.  Well, Bat's has been shown kicking it with a Cold War Superman.  He's hunted the steampunk lamps of merry old England.  He's even been portrayed as an honest-to-goodness bloodsucking creature of the night.  But he's definitely never been given the grindhouse, 70s exploitation pimped-out treatment.  Should be no surprise to anyone who knows us, but that is a freaking AWESOME idea, and I really hope DC lets the madman do his thing.  At the very least, I'd like some prints - especially one for the above Catwoman.




--Brad

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Comic Review: Catwoman- When in Rome



    In the Jeph Loeb and Tim Sale Batman stories, The Long Halloween and Dark Victory, Catwoman serves as a classic femme fatale, sexy, dangerous, and always skirting the line between hero and villain, always half in shadow.  As a lifelong Film Noir fan, I do love the femme fatale archetype.  And I have to admit, the outfit ramps up the look a few notches.


    Throughout both volumes, Catwoman plays a key role, but she is also oddly absent for a large block of time, with a kind of tacked on ‘Oh, I was in Italy’ explanation.  I found that odd and awkward.  I assume I wasn’t the only one, as the team came back together to create the story of her time in Italy.  And while the book is enjoyable, it adds little.


    Catwoman’s narration feels less Noir, and more like Buffy.  Her reference to her shoes and shopping at incongruous moments felt like Whedon at his worst.  And at the end of the day, the only character development is pretty much just a reestablishment of Catwoman being hung up on Batman.  Which we already know.  They’re the perfect match, but can never be together.  The Blondie character could have been interesting, but that storyline goes nowhere.


    If you really enjoyed The Long Halloween and Dark Victory, this is an OK companion.  Otherwise, I don’t know that it would mean a whole lot.  It’s almost like a deleted scene from a movie, that you can totally understand having been cut, but that is still fun to watch once.



Catwoman: When in Rome
Author: Jeph Loeb
Artist: Tim Sale
Publisher: DC Comics
ISBN: 978-1-401-20717-5

-Matt

Friday, October 5, 2012

Matt’s Week in Dork! (9/23/12-9/29/12)



    On Sunday, Brad, Ben, and I took a trip to a favorite Dork spot (seen in that stupid sequence…well, one of those stupid sequences…of Transformers 2) the Udvar Hazy.  Seeing the Discovery was nice, a shuttle that’s actually been to space and back.  A good start to a Week in Dork.


    And on Friday night, Lisa hosted anther meeting of the Justice League of Extraordinary Book Club.  This time ‘round our book was Get Jiro, and the reception was fairly tepid.  Not that it’s bad, but it’s certainly the weakest and least meaty book we’ve consumed.  Good food, good folk, and good conversation.  Another lovely evening.  The consensus seems to be that the book had potential, but was greatly lacking in depth.  The food-nerd stuff was great, but far, far too brief.  If the setting and many of the players were more fully realized, and more of the food culture was explored, this could be a very fun read.  As it is…Meh.



Dredd:  I can’t tell you how glad I was that this film didn’t disappoint.  It’s R-rated violence, over the top action, and some danged brutal human behavior.  No Rob Schnider to suck things up.  This is the Judge Dredd film I’d been waiting for.  No, the plot isn’t complex.  No, there’s no discussion of the human condition.  Yes, Dredd teaches Anderson how to kill, and yes, she does it pretty well.  Heads explode, people get skinned, lots and lots of people get blown all to crap.  And Dredd dispenses a whole pile of justice on some murdering, drug dealing scum.


Lee Miller: Through the Mirror:  A model and photographer, a contemporary of Picasso and Man Ray, Miller stands as a complicated figure.  Women like this fascinate me, as they defied expectations and helped to break molds in an era where it seemed that anyone could be anything with enough will, luck, and skill.  Troubled youth, interesting associations, haunting beauty.  There’s an alien quality, a distance to the woman herself.  And then there is her work.  Though I would never actually want to live in any time previous to now (and frankly, now is a bit too early), there is a part of me that would really like to spend a couple years traveling through the social circles of the 20s and 30s, Paris, Cairo, New York, the artists, writers, explorers, and scientists.  There is a movie in this woman’s life, especially her days with the troops in WWII.  It’s also interesting to see her son, trying to understand his mother and an old friend remembering the dear departed.


The Devil Hunter:  Rule of thumb: if you have to ask yourself, “is this racist?” the answer is almost certainly, “yes.”  Appallingly dreadful movie.  Digitized nudity?  What, are we in Japan?


Voodoo Black Exorcist:  Is everyone in this movie in blackface?  In spite of a kind of awesome opening credit sequence, not unlike that of Soylent Green, this is (shocking, I know) a super crappy movie out the worst movie industry on Earth (not true, it’s not the Philippines), Italy.  Racist, exploitative, poorly filmed.  Yup.  It’s Italian.  This movie has the editing equivalent of Touretts.  I’ll admit, I kind of like the insane, over the top music that plays during the red saturated flashbacks to happier, pre-Voodoo murder days.  I’d like to use that music for something better.  The voiceover work is amazing.


The Yesterday Machine:  Some swingin’ 60s jazz accompanies the groovy doings of a bunch of heppcats.  A story out of The Twilight Zone or The Outer Limits, though nowhere near as well crafted.  This could have made a great Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode.  While fairly entertaining in its own right, I think Mike or Joel and the Bots could have had a field day.  And then, Nazis!!!


Robot & Frank:  A quiet, near-future tale about a daft old man getting saddled with an infinitely patient medical robot, this movie is fairly light hearted and mellow.  Frank reminds me of myself, if I had a career that would afford me to live as he does, with all his eccentricities and cantankerousness.  The robot is a must.  Seriously, when is this gonna happen, because I’m sick of living in a robot-free house.  Aging, the remnants of our past, the nature of life.  And robots.


Dracula’s Fiancée:  Possibly the first Jean Rollin film I’ve seen that looks like it was edited by someone who knew what they were doing.  It’s also one of his most dialog heavy.  But again, I love that in 2002, he’s still making the kind of films he made in the 70s, polished though this is.  Though his subject is usually the undead of some kind, the movies are more surreal fantasy than horror.  Of the films I’ve seen to date, this is probably Rollin’s best.  I don’t want to say most coherent, because that would be a big lie.  And Brigitte Lahaie (still looking pretty good) rides in on a horse.  How awesome is that?


Hysteria:  “Steady as she goes Mrs. Parsons!  Steady as she goes.”  I don’t think it’s legal to make a movie in the UK about stuffy, uptight old world England without casting Jonathan Price.  The horrors of Victorian medicine and psychology give way to science and the realization that woman can experience sexual pleasure.  This movie is so amazingly British, looking at the whole Upstairs, Downstairs world with a wink and a nudge.  It’s all very charming.


    And of course, some more Charlie’s Angels, more Magnum, and more Battlestar Galactica.  All good fun in their own way.  We’re getting close to the point where Battlestar starts getting really brutal and where the first of the more long term cast starts to buy it.



    I’ve been enjoying a bunch of Simpsons and Futurama comics lately, so I thought, ‘why not?’ and grabbed the one-shot (I assume) Ralph Wiggum issue.  Ugh.  Ralph is often the surreal, stupid cherry on top of a good joke, but a whole comic devoted to him kind of feels like kicking an especially stupid dog.  Most of it isn’t funny, and most of it doesn’t feel true to the show at all; like the writers just didn’t get Ralph.  The final story, Ralph the Role Model is the best, and the only one that really captures the character.  Overall, not very good.


    The Li’l Homer one-shot was much better.  This one feels like it was written by fans of the show, who get the show.  Tales of Homer when he was a young boy, dealing with his awful dad and life in general.  Nothing amazing, but it’s fun.  I like Bongo Comics’ attempted retro stuff.  Adding the extra stuff, like the Li’l Homer cardboard puppet.  There’s a gimmicky 60s/70s vibe to it.


    At my local comic shop, I found Gangsta Rap Posse, as super-small press, ultra-offensive comic about an NWA-type rap group that doesn’t take to getting dissed by other rappers.  They swear a lot, drink a lot, and shoot a lot.  And they do like their ho’s.


    Issue 2 of Gangsta Rap Posse is more of the same, with more of the much abused agent, Saul, who seems to be kind of a badass with a van.  If you didn’t get your copy of “GRP Gangbangs Mrs. Mayor,” you need to read this.  It’s offensive, disgusting, and adults only.  As Brad said, it’s kind of the comic version of Body Count’s song ‘KKK Bitch.’


    I finally got back to Winter Soldier with issue 9.  I’m thinking more and more I should wait until this comes out in trade to read it.  Reading only a handful of pages at a time is frustrating to say the least.  It’s not amazing, but it’s a good read.  Just too many ads, to few pages.


    “Ragemoor’s will be done!”  The final issue of Ragemoor is the spiraling cacophony of mayhem and madness you probably expect from this twisted series.  Lovecraft filtered through Hammer Horror and drawn by the…distinct?…Richard Corben.  I may have to get this in trade when it comes out.  I still don’t quite know how I’ve become something of a Corben fan in the last couple years.


    I finally read the Clive Barker novella Cabal, which I’ve been meaning to read since first seeing Nightbreed all those many years ago.  I know Barker wrote and directed the film, but I was still surprised how slavishly the film followed the story, up until the final act (and even then, it was pretty close).  It was OK.  Because of how close the movie was to the story, there wasn’t a heck of a lot more to learn, not much more depth to backgrounds or history.  It is the set-up for something pretty grand, that I’m fairly certain Barker never revisited.  My primary complaint is his description of sex, which is just awkward especially when it comes to the vocabulary used.  It’s not the acts being depicted, but how they’re done and how often they don’t really fit with the story.  Distractions.


    Issue 0 of Justice League dealt with surprising topics.  The origin of Shazam (I guess they’re not calling him Captain Marvel now), a bit of Pandora, and…a Question.  It also ties into the 0 issue of The Phantom Stranger.  They’ve changed Billy Batson’s origin, I think.  Granted, my Captain Marvel/Shazam knowledge is limited almost exclusively to the 40s serial.


    Green Lantern Corps’ issue 0 reminds me why Guy Gardner is pretty much the lamest Lantern.  He’s just a jerk.  One of those mad at the world punks I always hate in books and movies.  Still the whole ‘almost a cop’ thing makes sense for someone gifted with a ring.


    Talon didn’t interest me from the start, but issue 0 hints at what could, in the right hands, be an interesting story.  But I’m not holding my breath.  What kind of stories will it feature?  A superhero Fugitive?  I do like the Court of Owls as villains, and this helps keep them in the picture.  Time will tell.  But I won’t be reading it anytime soon, to find out.


    Nightwing issue 0 looks into Dick Grayson’s evolution into Robyn.  But who cares.  No, it’s not bad or anything.  But yawn.


    Issue 0 of Catwoman is certainly less repugnant than issue 1, which just left me feeling kind of dirty.  I still don’t care much for it.  She seems a bit daft and weak, which is not at all how I imagine Batman’s ultimate femme fatale.  Strength, mystery, subtlety, and sexiness are Catwoman’s methods, but this version bashes a few heads, gets tossed around, and looks like she’s trying out for a manga, with her HUGE eyes that make her look a bit…Dim?  High?  Crazy?


    Wow.  I’ve got no frickn’ clue what the heck is going on in the whole Green Lantern side of the DC Universe.  I read a bit of the early Geoff Johns rebirth of Hal Jordan stuff, and it seemed pretty good.  But I didn’t keep up with it and now I’m totally lost.  Blackest Night?  Sinestro Corpsmen?  Zamarons?  I got no idea.  It’s a rainbow of insanity.


    Unlike the first several issues of her regular series, Diana (Wonder Woman to be) seems like she has some personality in this look back to her youth.  I guess the story is interesting enough.  But it would have been better if the regular comic were like this at all.  Reading this issue, I couldn’t help but be reminded of how 90s and pseudo-Goth the regular series is, which couldn’t be much further from what I’d want a Wonder Woman comic to be.  She’s a goddess, for crying out loud.  Why is her comic about brooding and moping?


    Taking place on Krypton, Supergirl issue 0 is the story of Superman’s uncle, a scientist like Superman’s dad, attempting to save his city with a power field and his daughter with a rocket.  I find the various portrayals of Krypton to be fascinating, be it in the movies, the cartoons, or the comics.  It makes you wonder, why didn’t the Lanterns do something about it?  Whatever the case, I can’t say the story is especially interesting.  It echoes Superman’s origin a bit too much.


    I’m still surprised that Batwoman of all characters has turned out to be one of the more interesting I’ve checked out from DC’s New 52.  Issue 0 is pretty good, going into Kate Kane’s ugly, ugly past and pretty grim personal life.  And it deals with her training, and her complicated relationship with her dad.  Batwoman really seems to be on the extremely dark side of the scale, perhaps even more so than Batman.  It’s interesting that the art and look of the comic is more fanciful than most, but the content feels more ‘real world.’  Christopher Nolan’s version of Batman’s Rogues Gallery seem more in line with her than with Bats himself.  Like when I read the first trade of this series, I’m just curious where they’re planning to take things, and how interwoven it will be with the rest.  I feel like it should be, especially with some of the weirder, fringe/horror elements, like Swamp Thing.



-Matt

Sunday, August 26, 2012

Geoff Johns & David Finch's Justice League of America!


Well this is an odd group.  Writer Geoff Johns and artist David Finch are teaming up for a brand new Justice League of America book set to launch in early 2013.  No Superman.  No Batman.  No Wonder Woman.  Instead we've got Martian Manhunter, Catwoman, Hawkman, Green Arrow, Star Girl, the new Green Lantern, Katana, Stargirl, and Vibe.  Yep, I don't know half of those guys either.

I've always been more of a Bats fan and less of a DC Comics guy, but the New 52 has reintroduced me to a lot of this stuff and I'm kinda interested in a JLA book that lacks the usual power trio.  And David Finch's art has always made me nostalgic for that Image era of the 90s.  I'll definitely pick up the book.

--Brad

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Comic Review: The Long Halloween



    I’m now up to three Batman graphic novels, and now the good outweighs the bad.  The Long Halloween plays like a hardboiled detective story, with a touch of the Godfather and a dash or two of Val Lewton.  Tim Sale’s art, from the angles to the use of shadows is straight out of the school of Film Noir.  It’s not always pretty, but it’s frequently striking.  And the story’s grim nature never really lets up.


    After the stage is set, the action starts with a Halloween murder in black and white, and red.  The mystery builds as the holidays come and go, leaving bodies in their wake.  A serial killer who strikes only on holidays?  Who could it be?  The list of suspects is a who’s who of Gotham City.  From the usual suspects all the way to the Dark Knight himself.


    Unlike my first experience with Batman comics, The Dark Knight Returns, the appearance of various characters and villains feels natural, not like they were plugged in as an excuse to put them on issue covers.  Catwoman and Harvey Dent are integral to the story, but when The Joker, The Riddler, and Poison Ivy show up, it’s not awkward or clunky.  And the use of The Calendar Man (seriously) as an almost Hannibal Lector character, creepily sitting like a spider in a web, deep inside Arkham Asylum is odd genius.


    Christopher Nolan’s Batman movies are deeply rooted in this story.  Characters, themes, even whole scenes.  I just wish Harvey Dent had made it to the screen more intact.  He’s one of the more compelling characters in this volume and in the film, The Dark Knight, but it always feels like he takes a back seat to more flashy characters like The Joker.  Batman really does have some of the coolest villains and supporting characters, though I think too many are too often over shadowed by a couple of the bigger ones (Joker, Penguin, and Riddler…but mostly Joker).  I think Catwoman could be especially interesting, as she fits in like the classic Femme Fatale, straddling the line between hero and villain, always tempting, always dangerous.  Yet her story in this volume frustratingly lacks pay-off.  It feels like something was building over the course of the story, yet ultimately goes nowhere.


    It deserves its place as a classic graphic novel, and folks interested in Batman should give it a read.  I think it’s a heck of a lot better than The Dark Knight Returns for sure.  Definitely worth checking out.



Batman: The Long Halloween
Author: Jeph Loeb
Artist: Tim Sale
Publisher: DC Comics
ISBN: 978-1-4012-3259-7

-Matt

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Matt’s Week in Dork! (6/24/12-6/30/12)


    Another weird week.  I guess most of them are.  These are the days, though.

The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou:  Probably Wes Anderson’s most surreal trip through family dysfunction, The Life Aquatic takes the archetypal aquatic nature film maker and applies his usual bent sense of tragic humor.  There’s that sense of failed dreams captured by the video tapes of the Dharma Initiative on Lost, or flashbacks on Venture Bros.  The good times are long gone and things are just grinding down, falling apart, consumed by entropy.  Anderson’s world is not our world, and the strange undersea sequences bring that home, if the characters hadn’t already.  But elements of reality creep into the fractured people and their difficult interplay.  Plus, when Zissou goes all Commando, it’s just straight-up badass.


Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter:  OK, OK, OK.  It’s about Abraham Lincoln, but you know, as a vampire hunter.  There’s no way you can enjoy this if you don’t embrace the madness.  Is it stupid?  Oh, yeah.  But it’s a heck of a lot of fun.  Frankly, I was expecting another disappointment, like Battleship or Ghost Rider 2, where it never mans up and goes as crazy as it needs to.  But it did.  Not as crazy as I wanted, but crazy enough to be a lot of fun.  Horse throwing, shotgun axing, old Lincoln kung-fu fighting, and all the other things that make a movie worth watching.


Doctor Who: The Awakening:  A lot gets crammed into a short story.  Trying to see Tegan’s grandfather takes the Doctor and his friends to a dumpy little village where some local history enthusiasts have gotten a little too into their historic reenactments.  And what’s up with the simpleton from the past?  Pretty weird stuff, and that awful little stone goblin thing is freaky.  Not really a great tale, but a fair two-part bridge story.


Slaughter:  Jim Brown bashes his way through the mob, and anyone else who gives him some crap.  This movie is awesome.  So many sleazy bad guys, especially the disgusting Rip Torn.  And Don Gordon makes a great partner, his way with the ladies and his jean jacket.  Oh, yeah.  Cool music, plenty of fisticuffs, and some great dialog.  Slaughter!!!


Watchmen:  I just really, really like this movie.  Sacrilege or not, I think that like the Lord of the Rings films, this actually improves some on the book.  Yup.  I said it.  Trimming a good deal of the unnecessary bits, especially the whole magazine stand thread that always annoyed me in the book.  The cast does a fine job.  The movie looks amazing.  Great soundtrack and score.  And the story is very cool.  This is a grand epic with a large cast of characters and deep history.   Graphic violence may disturb some; sadly the nudity seems to disturb more; and the moral ambiguity without a clear judgment will almost certainly throw many viewers for a loop.  Hero?  Villain?  Both?  Where is the line?  Is there a line at all?  Take one life to save a hundred and maybe they make you a hero.  What if you kill one hundred thousand to save six billion?  What happens when a man becomes a god?  Great stuff.  F the haters.


The H-Men:  Slow paced late 50s sci-fi horror, this is entertaining, if not especially exciting.  Some cool creature effects (melting folks, dripping slime, etc) help things along.  But there’s way, way too much sitting around in police station offices jabbering on about this gang or that criminal or some boat in the Pacific.  It feels like there are too many side stories or subplots for a movie about killer ooze.  Still, it was fun.  Probably best watched with friends.


    Ben and I started watching The Pacific, and some more Venture Bros.  Both excellent shows for totally different reasons.  And I started watching The River, which could be interesting, but suffers from network TV syndrome.


    Saturday night, Brad hosted a Batman night.  We started with a couple Adam West episodes featuring Cat Woman.  Goof-tastic fun.  So many awful puns, over the top acting, and twisted ‘plots.’  We followed that with a great episode of Brave and the Bold, featuring Bat Ape.  Yeah, he fights ‘jungle based crime.’  We followed that up with Tim Burton’s 1989 Batman.


Batman:  There are a lot of things I like about this movie, but I’ve never really been a fan.  Keaton is solid both as Wayne and Batman, the effects are good and the set design is awesome.  But it feels like there are too many balls being juggled.  I know it’s well loved, but I never connect with this film.  It’s muddy in tone, the plot wanders, and frankly, I just never like Jack Nicholson.  And Prince’s music makes me want to scream.  It’s so bloody awful.


    Then another bit of Adam West awesome.  And we followed that up with some more Brave and the Bold.  Oh, Aquaman, and his musical number.  What is up with that?  Sadly, I passed out not long into Batman and Robin.  What little I saw was absolutely awful, but some sick part of me feels I need to watch the whole Burton era series again one of these days.  I woke up when it was over, and saw one last Adam West story.  Love that show.



    I read the first hardcover volume of Invincible, Age of Reptiles, some 28 Days Later (reviews to follow).


    I also read the new League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, 2009, which was all kinds of Alan Moore nutty.  I don’t feel like I’m ready to review it.  I think I’m going to have to go back and read the three parts of Century, 1910, 1969, and 2009 as a unit.  Maybe I’ll have to read all of League again, before I’m really ready.  But if you’ve been reading League up to this point, you need to read this. 
Dang, man.  Total madness.



    Brad and I attended a live recording of Big Planet’s 50th podcast.  That was fun.  We weren’t sure what to expect, and were perhaps a bit quiet, taking in more than giving.  But it was pretty cool.  We’ve really got to get on the ball and do either a podcast, or a weekly video or something.  But it helped make for a good week in dork anyhow.


    And on Friday night, after watching Watchmen, Northern Virginia got hit with a CRAZY powerful storm that came on with no warning.  I’ve lived through at least three substantial hurricanes, countless massive snow storms, torrential downpours that would make Noah crap his pants, and all kinds of madness, and honestly, it’s the scariest thing I’ve ever seen.  When I looked outside, there was no rain, but the sky looked like a strobe light.  And the air was alive.  Not going in one direction or another, but seemingly every direction.  My building, which deadens the sound of the worst weather, creaked and moaned, and I could feel the air getting sucked out and pushed in.  On several occasions, the whole place suddenly smelled like outside, like trees and soil.  And I became genuinely concerned that there might be a tornado or something.  From what I understand, it was even worse elsewhere, and at least I never had more than flickering power, no long-term loss.  But it all reminds me how reliant on technology we all are.  I don’t think that’s a bad thing, exactly.  Just something to be aware of, and something to take into account.



-Matt